Description: William Kreml The Twenty-First Century Left: Cognitions in the Constitution and Why Buckley Is Wrong Carolina Academic Press, 2006. Hardcover. Xvi, 213 pages. Bound in blue cloth with gold foil title to spine. Inscribed by William Kreml to the front free endpaper: "To John - With best wishes." Signed and dated 8-8-06. VG+ Clean, square, and firm. Light push to bottom corner. Bright pages free of markings save author's inscription. Crisp dust jacket shows mild edge wrinkle. "The most extraordinary theoretical perspective ever lent to the American Constitution." Professor Victor G. Rosenblum, Northwestern University School of Law The Twenty-First Century Left: Cognitions in the Constitution and Why Buckley Is Wrong applies the richest possible theoretical framework to the American Constitution. For the first time ever, a constitutional analysis focuses on the cognitive forms of the constitution's key provisions and the cognitive forms of key constitutional cases. Changes in cognitions, after all, are what herald appropriate changes in the law, changes that ensure justice by updating established legal principles. William Kreml explores the cognitive, dialectical structure of the Earl Warren Supreme Court and its similarity to the cognitive structures of the English Edward Coke period. He examines the Constitution's primary debate over the legitimacy of public encumbrances on private contracts and reviews the cognitive similarity between Buckley v. Valeo (the case that denied campaign finance reform) and Dred Scott (the case that upheld slavery). Further, Kreml analyzes the cognitively complementary nature of the Constitution's original seven articles and the Bill of Rights, noting the Bill of Rights' democratically aggregative purpose. Finally, he shows how Robert Bork and William Rehnquist misinterpreted Shelley v. Kraemerthe case that began America's Constitutional dialectic, and how John Hart Ely misunderstood the nature of the Warren Court.
Price: 16 USD
Location: Charleston, South Carolina
End Time: 2025-02-11T22:23:26.000Z
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Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Special Attributes: Inscribed
Topic: Politics
Number of Pages: 230 Pages
Language: English
Publication Name: Twenty-First Century Left : Cognitions in the Constitution and Why Buckley Is Wrong
Publisher: Carolina Academic Press
Publication Year: 2006
Subject: Election Law, Constitutional, Political Process / Campaigns & Elections, Political, Political Ideologies / Conservatism & Liberalism
Features: New Edition
Item Weight: 19.2 Oz
Type: Textbook
Subject Area: Law, Philosophy, Political Science, Biography & Autobiography
Author: William Kreml
Format: Hardcover